Ragdoll: Now a major TV series

· Hachette UK
4.4
39 reviews
Ebook
304
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

'A twisted killer and a killer twist. Kill to get a copy' Simon Toyne, bestselling author of The Boy Who Saw

A body is discovered with six victims stitched together, nicknamed by the press as the 'Ragdoll'. Assigned to the shocking case are Detective William 'Wolf' Fawkes, recently reinstated to the London Met, and his former partner Detective Emily Baxter.

The 'Ragdoll Killer' taunts the police by releasing a list of names to the media, and the dates on which he intends to murder them. With six people to save, can Fawkes and Baxter catch a killer when the world is watching their every move?

'A brilliant, breathless thriller' M.J. Arlidge, bestselling author of Down to the Woods

Perfect for fans of MJ Arlidge, JP Delaney, Steve Cavanagh, Chris Carter and Helen Fields

Readers LOVE Ragdoll . . .

'This book kept me captivated, my heart pumping and guessing to the very end!'

'...a rollercoaster of a thriller.'

'...one of the most well written crime thrillers I have ever read'

'A very well written debut novel which had all the twists and turns and intrigue that you need.'

'Totally unputdownable'

Ratings and reviews

4.4
39 reviews
Midge Odonnell
March 15, 2018
Not bad as procedural's go but rather too much about "damaged" detectives making their own rules to catch a killer for my liking - it has been done so often that it all feels a little trite and unfortunately this book gets sucked down in to that accepted trope. Whilst the murders themselves are inventive and a little different from the usual shootings and stabbings they still feel a little mechanical somehow. We have no basis for the crimes until very late in the book and that feels more tagged on than a pre-planned plot, I don't really understand why it feels this way as it is flagged quite early in the book when dealing with Wolf being sectioned in St. Ann's psychiatric wing with Joel. Apart from Edmunds most of the characters are pretty unlikeable. Baxter and Wolf in particular seem to have no redeeming characteristics and are all about "the job" and battling their personal demons very unsuccessfully. Wolf's ex-wife, Andrea, is not particularly likeable either and falls in to the story at all costs journalist type; admittedly we do have moments of almost contrition for her worst excesses but then she returns to work and compounds them. I also found it very far fetched that after commiting grievous bodily harm on a suspect that any police officer, no matter what their rank, would be allowed back in to the force in any capacity, let alone back in their previous role. There are some nice pieces of humour within the book, but of a decidedly black nature and they are no doubt intended to give us a ringside seat to the camaraderie of the police force. Unfortunately, they are few and far between and are not evocative enough - Lynda La Plante does the "humanisation" of the police so much better. The story itself is pretty stop - start and their is insufficient flow to keep you turning the pages past bedtime, putting it down is all too easy if something more interesting comes along. The denouement is rushed and there is little tension built although that is achieved with the murders of the Mayor and Rana it is sadly missing towards the end. Not a bad book but not one that makes you cheer the protagonists on in their efforts to capture the killer. The reasoning behind the murders is woolly at best and the leaps of imagination taken by Wolf and his colleagues are not real feeling in the slightest - there is only so far your gut can take you. Maybe this is why Edmunds was my favoured character in the book - little angst and a good grasp of research and investigative techniques to secure a conviction; even if he does bend the rules by using his old Fraud IT connections to move his theory along.
5 people found this review helpful
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Sebastiaan Soetermans-Jelgersma
June 23, 2019
What a drag. A completely cliché-filled thriller, including a damaged detective main character, with a gut feeling about the bad guys, a gruff senior superior, a hard-ass chief that has the press on their back and a pretty TV journalist ex-wife. At one point the author makes a weird clear distinction that it's set in London, with the Met police and a UK criminal court. Ironically, it comes across as if the author has *only* watched U.S. films and TV series about serial killers. The police officers are joking around while at what is portrayed as the most disturbing crime scene. That makes the book laughable, and not in a good way. *que Law & Order sound*
1 person found this review helpful
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Pia SQWIRREL
May 7, 2021
Wow ! Now that's what I call a thriller !! It would make an incredible film. But, it is gruesome. And I wonder what happened to the discarded bits ... I don't want to reveal too much. I'm going to read book 2 and 3. Well done Mr COLE. Well worth 5 ⭐. I had a tough time putting it down as it's such a page turner. I never imagined the plot twist towards the end. It's nice not to know the guilty before the end.
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About the author

Daniel Cole (@DanielColeBooks) is the Sunday Times bestselling author of the Ragdoll trilogy, which has now been published in over thirty countries and is currently being adapted for TV. He has worked as a paramedic, an animal protection officer and with the RNLI lifeguards, but for the past five years has been describing himself on paperwork as a 'full-time writer'. Mimic is his fourth novel.

He lives on the south coast of England and divides his time between the beach and the forest.

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